Arno Schickedanz

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Arno Schickedanz in 1938

Arno Schickedanz (27 December 1892[1] 12 April 1945) was a German diplomat who held paramount positions in both the NSDAP Office of Foreign Affairs (APA) and the Reich Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories (RMfdbO) of Nazi Germany. Both ministries he held positions in were under the command of Alfred Rosenberg, a friend since childhood and a leading Nazi theorist and ideologue. Schickedanz was a vehement antisemite, and his positions within Rosenberg's ministries often involved antisemitic programming.[2] In particular, Schickedanz was a central figure in the expansion of the Foreign Policy Office. He was the proposed ruler of the Reichskommissariat Kaukasien; however, this territorial entity never came into existence.[not verified in body] Schickedanz died of suicide on 12 April 1945.

Schickedanz met Alfred Rosenberg, who grew up in the Estonian city of Reval, in his Latvian hometown of Riga, where Rosenberg had been studying at the Polytechnic Institute since 1910. Both cities were part of Russia at the time. In literature, Schickedanz is referred to, among other things, as a "school friend" and "Corps brother" of Rosenberg. The mention of school friend refers to their shared studies at the Polytechnic Institute in Riga, and Corps brother refers to the Corps Rubonia, founded in 1875, where Rosenberg and Schickedanz became members on the same day, March 2, 1911. Due to this early bond, Schickedanz remained one of the few close friends of Rosenberg addressed informally. The connection to Rosenberg had a formative character and decisively influenced his entire life thereafter.

According to the Rubonorum album, he continued his studies in Moscow from the summer of 1915 onwards with Rosenberg, and in January 1918, he graduated there with a degree in chemistry. Consequently, he gained personal experience with the rule of the Bolsheviks. In the autumn of 1918, he volunteered for a German cavalry regiment and thus participated as a soldier of the German Army in the First World War. Before the end of the war in 1918, Schickedanz worked together with Erwin von Scheubner-Richter, Otto von Kursell, and Max Hildebert Boehm for the German occupiers in the "Press Office Ober Ost VIII" in Riga. Otto von Kursell, with whom Schickedanz had worked until then, was one of the first people Rosenberg visited after his move to Munich at the end of 1918. In 1919, he was a member of the Baltic Landwehr, which recaptured Riga, occupied by the Bolsheviks, in May 1919.

Weimar Republic

Political writer

During the early twenties, Schickedanz was an employee in the Economic Reconstruction Association initiated by Max von Scheubner-Richter, where he, along with von Scheubner-Richter and Biskupski, handled the daily business affairs. Simultaneously, Schickedanz served as the deputy director and personal secretary of Biskupski, the organization's vice president. Together, Schickedanz and Biskupski arranged with the Russian claimant to the throne, Grand Duke Cyril Vladimirovich Romanov, for General Ludendorff to utilize funds totaling 500,000 gold marks to promote the joint national German-Russian cause.

Schickedanz supported von Scheubner-Richter in publishing the weekly magazine "Economic Policy Correspondence on Eastern Questions and Their Significance for Germany." From 1923 to 1933, Schickedanz was the head of the Berlin office of the antisemitic daily newspaper Völkischer Beobachter. Due to his participation in the Beer Hall Putsch, Schickedanz later counted among the "Old Fighters" and received the so-called "Blood Order."

In 1927, Schickedanz published the radically antisemitic text The Judaism – A Counter-Race, which appeared gnostic and apocalyptic. In 1928, he followed it with the content-related text Social Parasitism in the Life of Nations, in which he portrayed Jews as a "race" of parasites and pests. Rosenberg explicitly referred to this latter publication and adopted the concept and idea of a parasitic "counter-race" in his 1930 work The Myth of the 20th Century.

The resentment that Joseph Goebbels had developed against Rosenberg at that time also affected Rosenberg's representatives. On February 16, 1930, Goebbels noted about Schickedanz: "He asked if I had something against him. I gave him an honest answer. He is probably decent personally. But he has nothing to eat. And a Baltic!" Goebbels' attitude did not change the fact that Schickedanz was able to establish a fairly close relationship with Adolf Hitler during those years of the Weimar Republic.

Foreign policy orientation

On September 14, 1930, Rosenberg was elected to the Reichstag as an NSDAP representative for the electoral district of Hesse-Darmstadt, where he served on the Foreign Affairs Committee. In the spring of 1932, Rosenberg unsuccessfully pressured Schickedanz to move his residence to Berlin to secure a spot on the candidate list for the Reichstag elections. It is suspected that Schickedanz's lack of presence in Berlin at that time may have led to the rejection of this proposal. Schickedanz did not become a member of the Reichstag until 1936, three years after the National Socialist "seizure of power." However, during those days, Schickedanz was actively involved in supporting Rosenberg's foreign policy interests. In 1931, Schickedanz established the connection for Rosenberg with the Baltic-British journalist and Baron Wilhelm de Ropp and his former war acquaintance Major Frederick William Winterbotham. Wilhelm de Ropp, who had been dispossessed by the Soviets and was a correspondent for the newspaper The Times as well as a foreign representative of the Bristol Aeroplane Company, later became a significant confidant of Rosenberg in London.

National Socialism

References

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